Now that Central Ohio voters have approved an $8 billion mobility plan called LinkUS, the next 25 years of upgrades to the ...
Jeff Pullin with COTA said normal routes will operate later into the night ... You’ll be able to park your car in a lot, hop on a bus to Downtown Columbus between 6 and 8 p.m. and get bused ...
A major key point of the plan is bus rapid transit routes where dedicated bus lanes are created to speed up public transit ...
The levy would fund a plan called LinkUs by COTA and its supporters. The LinkUs plan would create five bus rapid transit ...
The Moving Central Ohio Forward committee has raised $1.2 million in less than four months to advocate for the Central Ohio ...
increasing COTA's overall share from 0.5% to 1%. The money will generate public funding for the LinkUS initiative. The new services include five "bus rapid transit" systems, similar to Cleveland's ...
COTA spokesman Jeff Pullin said in an email ridership will improve as mobility options increase. The levy would fund bus rapid transit routes and improvements to sidewalks and bike paths. "An example ...
Local sales tax is set to increase next year by a half percent after a Central Ohio Transit Authority sales tax levy passed Tuesday. The tax will fund LinkUS, a plan for more bus service ...
Three of at least five bus rapid transit routes — the West Broad, Northwest and East Main corridors — have already been identified and are expected to be open within five years. COTA president ...
COTA’s Linden Green Line is part of the initiative; the funding would turn a seven-mile abandoned rail corridor into a linear park with faster bus routes, bikeways, expanded sidewalks ...
COTA says it would use that money to make the LinkUS plan a reality and increase service by 45%, build the region's first rapid bus lines and fund more than 500 miles of sidewalks, bike paths and ...